I am a high school science teacher at the American International School of Mozambique, an IB World School in Southern Africa.
This is one of the many insects found in Gorongosa National Reserve in Mozambique, Southern Africa. I guess the insect represents how I am awed at how communities or groups can work together for a common cause, pretty much like how members of an insect colony collaborate. (Image from: Bill Higham's Flicker photostream)
Journal Response:
What do you treasure?
I treasure friendships and memories.
PSA Storyboard
Thesis statement: (Why is this National Park valuable?)
Statement of the problem: (What is threatening the sustainability of the National Park’s natural and cultural resources?)
Argument 1: - supporting facts (location of National Park and its natural and cultural resources that should be sustained)
Argument 2: - supporting facts (Hypothesis consequences to future of the natural and cultural resources if threats continue based on the evidence you researched)
Argument 3: - supporting facts (Present possible solutions that the community or actions that the government could take to sustain the natural and cultural resources of the National Park)
Conclusion and call for action:
OR
Common Storyboard
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Text:
What else lurk in the mountains, rivers and valleys of GNR?
Text:
Chameleons are just a company to the hundreds of still unidentified reptiles in the recently discovered biodiversity spot, Mt. Mabu.
Text:
An expedition team of British and African conservation biologists bore witness to the hundreds of recently named birds of various kinds.
Text:
Apart from a haven of endemic species just discovered, Mt. Mabu still
Journal Response:
PSA Storyboard
Conclusion and call for action:
OR
Common Storyboard
What else lurk in the mountains, rivers and valleys of GNR?
Chameleons are just a company to the hundreds of still unidentified reptiles in the recently discovered biodiversity spot, Mt. Mabu.
An expedition team of British and African conservation biologists bore witness to the hundreds of recently named birds of various kinds.
Apart from a haven of endemic species just discovered, Mt. Mabu still